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Representative Adam Kinzinger, an Illinois Republican, strongly criticized his own political party, saying that the GOP is no longer focused on policy and has become all about “loyalty” to former President Donald Trump.

Kinzinger was one of the 10 House Republicans to vote to impeach Trump in the wake of the January 6 insurrection carried out by the then-president’s supporters against the U.S. Capitol. The GOP lawmaker has become one of Trump’s most vocal critics and aligned himself with Representative Liz Cheney, who was recently ousted from her role as chair of the House Republican Conference due to her repeated condemnation of the former president.

“I think what I’m used to saying to any Republican that’s maybe kind of confused by the moment we’re in is policy doesn’t matter anymore. It literally is all your loyalty to Donald Trump. As I’ve said before, this is something that like echoes a little bit out of North Korea, where no matter what policy comes out, you’re loyal to the guy,” Kinzinger told NBC News’ Meet the Press in a Sunday interview.

Representative Adam Kinzinger (R-Illinois) criticized the GOP for becoming all about “loyalty” former President Donald Trump. In this photo, Kinzinger speaks to reporters after Representative Liz Cheney (R-Wyoming) was ousted from her leadership role on May 12 at the U.S. Capitol Hill in Washington, D.C.
MANDEL NGAN/AFP via Getty Images

The Republican congressman said he’s heard many people say, “I don’t like what Donald Trump tweets, but I like his policies, so I’m going to support him.” Kinzinger then pointed out that when it comes to Cheney, people say essentially the opposite, “Look, I like her policies, I don’t like what she tweets, so she needs to leave.”

“What that shows to me is an inconsistency that is built solely around allegiance to one man: Donald Trump. And we have to recognize that as a party. And we have to recognize that four months ago we allowed, basically, the narrative to lead to an insurgency on January 6,” the GOP lawmaker said. “And until we take ownership of that, we can’t heal.”

Cheney was formally ousted from her role as the No. 3 House Republican last Wednesday. Since then, Cheney has doubled down on her condemnation of Trump, warning that he continues to pose a threat to the country. The Wyoming congresswoman has criticized fellow Republican who still back the former president, saying she’ll do everything in her power to ensure he doesn’t get re-elected in the future.

Despite failing to provide substantiating evidence, Trump and his allies continue to baselessly claim that President Joe Biden and Democrats “stole” the 2020 election through widespread voter fraud. This extraordinary allegation was dismissed in December by former U.S. Attorney General William Barr, who was widely viewed as one of Trump’s most loyal Cabinet officials. Barr asserted that there was “no evidence” of fraud that would impact the election’s outcome.

Dozens of lawsuits challenging the election results filed by Trump and his supporters in state and federal courts were dismissed and rejected—including by judges appointed by the former president and other Republicans. Furthermore, audits and recounts in multiple battleground states—including places where the election was overseen by pro-Tump Republicans—have reaffirmed Biden’s win. And the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency at the Department of Homeland Security described the 2020 election as the “most secure in American history.”

Cheney again warned Sunday against the threat Trump poses by repeatedly denying reality and casting doubt on the legitimacy of U.S. elections.

“I think it’s dangerous,” the Wyoming Republican told ABC News’ This Week. “I think that we have to recognize how quickly things can unravel. We have to recognize what it means for the nation to have a former president who has not conceded and who continues to suggest that our electoral system cannot function, cannot do the will of the people.”

Newsweek reached out to GOP House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy for comment.

Source Article from https://www.newsweek.com/adam-kinzinger-says-gop-all-about-loyalty-donald-trump-compares-north-korea-1591927

On Thursday, Ethiopia’s Aircraft Accident Investigation Bureau (AIB) released its preliminary report on the crash of Ethiopian Airlines Flight ET302, which killed all 157 passengers and crew. The crash, which took place on March 10, marked the second fatal crash of a nearly brand-new Boeing 737 Max airliner since October and precipitated the grounding of the global 737 Max fleet.

The AIB’s initial findings present data from the crashed plane’s flight-data recorder (FDR), which shows that faulty readings from a malfunctioning angle-of-attack (AOA) sensor triggered the 737 Max’s Maneuvering Characteristics Augmentation System (MCAS) that is designed to automatically push the nose of the plane downward.

“Shortly after liftoff, the value of the left angle of attack sensor deviated from the right one and reached 74.5 degrees while the right angle of attack sensor value was 15.3 degrees,” the report said.

In a statement, Boeing confirmed that the AOA sensor triggered MCAS just like it had done on Lion Air Flight JT610, which crashed on October 28 off the coast of Indonesia.

“The preliminary report contains flight data recorder information indicating the airplane had an erroneous angle of attack sensor input that activated the Maneuvering Characteristics Augmentation System (MCAS) function during the flight, as it had during the Lion Air 610 flight,” Boeing said.

Data from the FDR and recordings from the cockpit seemingly confirm that the Ethiopian pilots followed Boeing’s procedures on how to defeat an erroneously triggered MCAS.

Read more: FAA expects Boeing to come up with new software to fix the grounded 737 Max in a matter of weeks.

Unfortunately, the pilots also reported issues with portions of the manual flight controls after MCAS was turned off.

More specifically, the first officer complained approximately three minutes into the flight that his controls to manually trim the aircraft stabilizers were not working.

The preliminary report did not assign causation for the crash, and a final report is expected at a later date.

Boeing is working on a software update for the 737 Max’s control system that will dial back the intrusiveness of MCAS.

“To ensure unintended MCAS activation will not occur again, Boeing has developed and is planning to release a software update to MCAS and an associated comprehensive pilot training and supplementary education program for the 737 Max,” Boeing’s statement said.

“As previously announced, the update adds additional layers of protection and will prevent erroneous data from causing MCAS activation,” Boeing added. “Flight crews will always have the ability to override MCAS and manually control the airplane.”

According to the Federal Aviation Administration, Boeing is expected to submit its package of potential fixes for regulatory approval in the coming weeks.

Source Article from https://www.businessinsider.com/boeing-ethiopian-investigators-confirm-bad-sensor-triggered-faulty-software-before-crash-2019-4

SALT LAKE CITY — The statewide mask mandate will be lifted by April 10 under a bill that passed the Utah State Legislature in the final hours of the 2021 session.

The bill — dubbed by its sponsor the “COVID-19 endgame” — sets metrics for lifting health restrictions. It was carefully negotiated between the legislature, Utah’s Department of Health and Governor Spencer Cox.

In an interview with FOX 13 on Friday night, Gov. Cox said he would be willing to sign it.

“It’s much better than it was. The original version of the bill had the mandate ending immediately. This was a big push for us,” he said. “Look, we’re vaccinating 25,000 people every day. We want to get through the most vulnerable, we will be through the most vulnerable by April 10 so we feel much better about the bill.”

On Thursday, the governor previously indicated he was uneasy about the ‘endgame’ bill with Utah still in the pandemic.

House Bill 294‘s final version said other restrictions can begin to be loosened once Utah hits 1.63 million doses of the COVID-19 vaccine, the 14-day case rate is less than 191 per 100,000 and the state’s ICU hospitalization rate is less than 15% on a seven-day average.

The mask mandate would be lifted April 10. However, the bill now allows the mandate to remain for gatherings with crowds above 50. County governments would be able to adopt their own mask mandates, too. The bill also preserves some health restrictions for K-12 schools, and it does not restrict businesses from requiring them.

But all public health orders would terminate by July 1.

The House voted overwhelmingly for the bill (while simultaneously rejecting other efforts to lift the mandate immediately). It was Senate Republican leaders who indicated they were uneasy with the bill and questioned its need, as Utah was doing well with vaccine adoption.

“We didn’t legislate our way into the pandemic,” said Sen. Jerry Stevenson, R-Layton, who later added: “I’m not in favor of trying to legislate our way out of this.”

But on Friday night, they came around and backed the bill.

Senate Minority Whip Luz Escamilla, D-Salt Lake City raised concerns about the bill, pointing out the pandemic is not over.

“Certainly we’re going to be making decisions based on science,” she said.

Sen. Derrin Owens, R-Fountain Green, pointed to the bill’s metrics and the negotiations between the governor and the department of health.

“It’s really who would have thought when we were in the middle of this that we were able to offer such a bill that shows how we can exit and provide an endgame to this,” he said.

When Utah first entered the pandemic, then-Governor Gary Herbert was reluctant to issue a mask mandate, but allowed counties to do it with his permission. He issued a statewide mandate in November when COVID-19 cases surged. Gov. Cox has kept the mandate in place and argued in favor of it.

But lawmakers have faced increasing pressure to loosen restrictions, particularly as more people get vaccinated. They pointed to being hit with constituent communications, many that complained the masks were an attack on their personal freedoms.

It was a year ago Saturday that Gov. Herbert issued his first state of emergency for the novel coronavirus.

Source Article from https://www.fox13now.com/news/coronavirus/local-coronavirus-news/utah-legislature-approves-lifting-mask-mandate-april-10

Miami, FL.- La comunidad hispana en Estados Unidos tendrá desde hoy un mayor acceso a la información y a las noticias que les afectan gracias a la alianza formada por Noticias Telemundo y el diario La Opinión.

 

Como resultado de este acuerdo, Noticias Telemundo ofrecerá primicias y adelantos de las series noticiosas que trabajará en conjunto con La Opinión y, a su vez, compartirá sus videos en los sitios del diario.

 

La Opinión y Telemundo se unen para informar a la comunidad

 

“Estamos muy contentos, ya que asociarse con el periódico en español más importante del país no es algo que sucede todos los días”, dijo Luis Fernández, Vicepresidente Ejecutivo de Noticias Telemundo. “Nuestras estructuras se complementan de una manera ideal para producir historias de interés para la comunidad hispana”, dijo Fernández.

 

Por su parte, Damián Mazzotta, Gerente General de la zona oeste de Impremedia, la empresa que agrupa a La Opinión y otros medios hispanos en todo el país, aseguró que la organización está muy emocionada de unir fuerzas con el equipo de Telemundo. 

 

“Durante 90 años de servicio La Opinión se ha dedicado a abogar por la comunidad latina. Creemos que esta alianza tendrá un impacto duradero al generar contenido relevante que refleja el presente y futuro de nuestra cultura”, indicó Mazzotta.

 

Eduardo Suñol, vicepresidente de Noticias Telemundo Digital, resaltó que esta alianza unificará las voces hispanas de costa a costa ya que muchas veces las historias locales de la comunidad se quedan en las calles, en los supermercados, en los lugares de trabajo y se pierden por falta de difusión.

 

“Nosotros queremos contar esas historias locales para que no se pierdan y que por el contrario, resuenen en todo el país. Que lo que pase en Los Angeles, se sepa en Miami o en Nueva York y que nuestra comunidad no esté limitada”, dijo Suñol.

 

El acuerdo se produce a pocos meses de  las elecciones presidenciales, un momento en el que la comunidad necesita estar más informada para tomar las decisiones que afectarán a sus vidas.

 

“Este es un tiempo decisivo para los hispanos. Quien quiera ser presidente no puede ignorar o dejar de considerar la voz de nuestra comunidad”, indicó Fernández. “Esta alianza nos permitirá incrementar recursos y multiplicar plataformas para que la gente esté más enterada”.

 

De igual manera, Gabriel Lerner, editor en jefe de La Opinión, aseguró que gracias a esta alianza los hispanos tendrán la oportunidad de recibir información de gran importancia para la comunidad en esta época en la que se aproximan las elecciones.

Source Article from https://www.telemundo.com/noticias/2016/07/26/noticias-telemundo-y-la-opinion-se-alian-para-servir-la-comunidad-hispana


“Los malditos voceros”, nota que está en la actual edición de NOTICIAS, testimonia la distancia que Francisco eligió tomar con sus “mensajeros”, y en especial con uno: Gustavo Vera. En el texto se cuentan los dos episodios en que el Papa no asistió a unas conferencias en las que participaba Vera, el comienzo de la edición en Argentina de L’Osservatore Romano -el medio oficial del Vaticano, en cuyo primer número local hay una columna titulada “diálogo directo y sin voceros”-, e incluso una supuesta expulsión del titular del legislador de Santa Marta, la residencia de Bergoglio, más varios testimonios que documentan como se enfrió la relación entre estos dos viejos amigos. La reacción del titular de La Alameda no se hizo esperar.
A través de su cuenta de Twitter, Vera lanzó media docena de tuits donde apunta contra este medio. “Noticias y Perfil están tan malinformados que omiten que entre el 31/1y el 9/2 residí en Santa Marta y almorcé y cené varias veces con mi amigo”, “La nota de Perfil y Noticias es totalmente falsa y ellos lo saben. Pero siguen el método Goebbels ‘miente y miente que algo quedará’” fueron algunos. Cabe aclarar que en la mencionada nota se documenta la última residencia del legislador, quien no quiso hablar para la publicación, dentro del Vaticano. Incluso Pino Solanas, cercano a Vera, salió a defenderlo vía Twitter. “En los viajes que realicé al Vaticano constaté personalmente el afecto que Francisco tiene por su colaborador Vera”.
A continuación la seguidilla completa de tuits y el intercambio con el redactor de la nota, donde lo acusa de hacer una “opereta”. Vera también menciona la pelea entre la Iglesia y los scouts, hecho que NOTICIAS  levantó en su web y que el legislador interpretó como una operación.

 

 




Source Article from http://noticias.perfil.com/2017/02/15/el-durisimo-descargo-del-supuesto-vocero-del-papa-contra-noticias/


Maradona intentó frenar la salida de NOTICIAS

Mediante una cautelar se quiso evitar la publicación de una nota a Rocío Oliva en la que muestra fotos de golpes que le atribuye al futbolista

POLÉMICA. Oliva mostró a NOTICIAS varias fotos en las que sale golpeada y denuncia que habrían sido de su ex pareja, Diego Maradona. [ Ver fotogalería ]


La jueza Mónica Liliana Preisz dio lugar a una medida cautelar presentada por los abogados de Diego Maradona mediante la cual se prohíbe a NOTICIAS publicar declaraciones de Rocío Oliva sobre la vida privada del ex jugador.

En el último número de la revista, que se distribuye hoy de manera anticipada por el feriado, Oliva muestra, en exclusiva, las fotos que, según ella, prueban que Maradona la golpeaba.

Sin embargo, la decisión del Juzgado Civil y Comercial Nº12 de Morón llegó a NOTICIAS en horas de la tarde del jueves 19,cuando la edición de la misma ya estaba impresa y en proceso de distribución.

La jueza argumentó en su escrito que cuando alguien siente afectado su derecho a la intimidad “está habilitado para solicitar el dictado de medidas precautorias suficientes que dispongan el cese de los actos que el actor considere lesivos, siempre y cuando se acredite la verosimilitud de derecho y el peligro en la demora, presupuestos básicos de toda medida cautelar”.

Este impedimento de publicar dichos de la ex de Maradona no solo alcanza a NOTICIAS, sino también a todos los medios de información, sean estos televisivos, radiales, impresos o digitales.

También le niega a Oliva la posibilidad de hacer declaraciones públicas alusivas “a la situación personal, aspectos subjetivos, dignidad, salud psíquica, honorabilidad y demás cuestiones atinentes a la vida privada del Sr. Diego Armando Maradona”.

En la nota, la ex del ídolo cuenta las intimidades de su convivencia en Dubai con el futbolista. Y también se reproduce la desmentida de Maradona, a través de sus abogados, de los hechos de violencia que le adjudica Oliva.


 




Source Article from http://noticias.perfil.com/2014-06-19-49593-maradona-intento-frenar-la-salida-de-noticias/

A las 10 de la mañana comenzó el acto por el aniversario número 252 del natalicio del general José Artigas.

El acto fue en la Plaza Independencia y contó con la presencia del presidente Tabaré Vázquez, quien no hizo uso de la palabra.

Según informó radio Monte Carlo, entre otras autoridades se encontraban los ministros María Julia Muñoz, Carolina Cosse, Eduardo Bonomi, Tabaré Aguerre y Liliam Kechichian. También estuvieron presentes la directora de Secundaria Celsa Puente y las senadoras Lucía Topolansky y Mónica Xavier.

De tarde, sobre las 17:30 horas, se realizarán diversos espectáculos, como por ejemplo el que contará con la participación de Edu “Pitufo” Lombardo, la murga La Cigarra y Humoristas Sociedad Anónima. Ya hacia las 20 horas culminan los festejos con un show de fuegos artificiales.

Source Article from http://www.elpais.com.uy/informacion/vazquez-encabeza-acto-aniversario-natalicio-artigas.html

La Gran Época le presenta un resumen de las últimas noticias mexicanas. En primer lugar, la secretaria de Relaciones Exteriores viajó al país vecino y diálogo con referentes como Paul Ryan y Ben Cardin, uno de los temas destacados fue el de los “dreamers”. Por otro lado, el efecto post-Trump llegó ahora a las tarjetas de crédito, ya que las entidades bancarias están restringiendo los montos disponibles.La economía de México podría entrar en recesión si Trump cumple sus amenazas al llegar a la presidencia de Estados Unidos, señaló Alicia Bárcenas. El Departamento de Transporte de Estados Unidos aprobó el acuerdo entre Delta y Aeroméxico y -por último- desde el primer día de enero de 2017 la gasolina aumentará 15%.

Ruiz Massieu visitó Estados Unidos para hablar de migrantes y del TLCAN

Claudia Ruiz Massieu, Secretaria de Relaciones Exteriores (SRE), visitó Estados Unidos para sostener diversos encuentros con líderes del Congreso y de organismos influyentes en la política de EEUU.  “En gira de trabajo por Washington, DC, tuve la oportunidad de reunirme con líderes del Congreso de #EUA, como Paul Ryan, vocero de la Cámara de Representantes. Este encuentro buscó estrechar relaciones y refrendar el compromiso de bienestar con la comunidad mexicana que habita en #EUA”, informó la Secretaria, acompañada del Embajador Carlos Sada y  de Paulo Carreño, Subsecretario para América del Norte.

“Durante mi encuentro con Ben Cardin, conversamos sobre política exterior regional y destacamos también la importancia del TLCAN para ambos países”, escribió la titular de la SRE en su página de Facebook, quien también se reunió con miembros de The Heritage Foundation, señalando “la importancia que tiene la relación entre México y EUA en temas de competitividad y desarrollo económico”, precisó Ruiz Massieu.

La titular de la SRE escuchó testimonios e historias de vida de #DreamersWithoutBorders -quienes visitaron México- mencionando que “estos jóvenes son un orgullo de nuestro país”.  Y firmó la Declaración #TRICAMEX, mecanismo para “acompañar, atender y defender los derechos de nuestros paisanos en #EUA”.

Elección de Trump impacta a tarjetas bancarias

Los bancos están limitando montos de tarjetas de crédito ante la presión del entorno económico derivado del efecto Trump. Después del período de ampliación y crecimiento del crédito bancario, las más importantes instituciones en el país monitorean y limitan la expedición de tarjetas de crédito, informa la agencia Reuters.

BBVA Bancomer anunció la semana pasada la reducción de límites crediticios de tarjetas bancarias, así como el monitorio de ciertas cuentas; INBURSA declaró a Reuters que redujo un 8% la aprobación de tarjetas bancarias respecto de junio pasado; BANORTE estaría pensando tomar medidas precautorias para el consumo crediticio con sus instrumentos bancarios.

(Foto: Pixabay.com)

Recesión del país en 2017 si Trump cumple amenazas: CEPAL

La economía de México podría entrar en recesión si Trump cumple sus amenazas al llegar a la presidencia de Estados Unidos, señaló Alicia Bárcenas, secretaria general de la CEPAL, al presentar el Balance preliminar de las economías de América Latina y El Caribe 2016 en la conferencia de prensa en Santiago de Chile el día de ayer. Estimaciones previas indicaban que México crecería al 2%, pero la situación actual hace prever que será de un 1.9%, expresó Bárcenas.

Las economías de Centroamérica y México (como grupo) pasaron de registrar una inflación (acumulada a 12 meses) de 2,5% en septiembre de 2015 a 3,4% en septiembre de 2016. “América Latina y el Caribe retomará tenue crecimiento en 2017 en medio de incertidumbres sobre la economía mundial. Tras dos años seguidos de caídas, la región crecerá 1,3% el próximo año en un complejo escenario internacional”, indican las nuevas proyecciones de la CEPAL.

Si hay continuidad en la política monetaria expansiva del Banco Central Europeo y del Banco Central de Japón hasta fines de 2017,”la normalización de las tasas de interés en Estados Unidos puede conllevar un reacomodo de los precios de los activos financieros, volatilidad financiera y aumentos en los costos de financiamiento para la región”.

La CEPAL recomienda a los países“seguir fomentando la inversión mediante políticas económicas contracíclicas, con aumentos de productividad además de medidas fiscales activas y ajustes inteligentes… reducir la evasión y elusión –que llega al 6,7% del PIB regional-, cautelar el gasto público, revisar la estructura de subsidios (especialmente a los combustibles) e incentivos y reorientar hacia la promoción de inversiones y gasto social esencial”.

Estados Unidos aprueba alianza Delta-Aeroméxico

El Departamento de Transporte de Estados Unidos aprobó el acuerdo entre Delta y Aeroméxico que permitirá a las aerolíneas operar el más importante mercado de viajes aéreos en Estados Unidos y en México. La pre-aprobación del USDT del 4 de noviembre condicionaba a las aerolíneas a contar con slots suficientes para atender 24 nuevos vuelos diarios del Aeropuerto Internacional de la Ciudad de México (AICM) al aeropuerto John F. Kennedy en Nueva York.

El 26 de abril de 2016 el Senado ratificó el Acuerdo sobre Transporte Aéreo entre México y EEUU, eliminando las limitaciones al “número de aerolíneas que pueden volar en cada ruta entre los dos países”; la Comisión Federal de Competencia Económica ratificó el 29 de abril el acuerdo de colaboración conjunta entre ambas empresas condicionado a cesión de 8 pares de slots (horarios de aterrizaje y despegue), informó Aeroméxico.

Delta&Aeroméxico operan anualmente +400 vuelos entre México y EEUU con más de cinco millones de pasajeros. AeroMéxico, tiene +600 salidas diarias a +80 destinos en América, Europa y Asia, con servicio anual a +15 millones de pasajeros.  Los vuelos a México proceden de +15 destinos en EEUU, con conexiones mundiales en aeropuertos de Ciudad de México (MEX), Monterrey (MTY), Guadalajara (GDL) y Hermosillo (HMO).

Gasolina subirá 15% al iniciar 2017

Desde el primer día de enero de 2017 la gasolina aumentará 15% por el aumento de los precios de referencia del petróleo y las variaciones en el tipo de cambio del peso, entre otros factores, anunció Roberto Díaz de León, consejero de la Organización Nacional de Expendedores de Petróleo (ONEXPO).

La ONEXPO explica que “los precios de los combustibles tendrán que ir asociados a la cotización del crudo en los mercados internacionales, el tipo de cambio y costos asociados al transporte y almacenamiento, que en realidad nunca los conocíamos y un tema de margen que cada estación de servicio estará incorporando en el precio”.

La ONEXPO también anunció que la gasolina tendrá dos precios, y que se liberalizará primero en el norte del país. La Comisión Reguladora de Energía tiene hasta el 31 de diciembre para definir los plazos de la apertura en el resto de las regiones del país. Entrevistado por Ciro Gómez Leyva, Díaz de León comentó que con la liberalización del precio de las gasolinas, el mercado irá madurando, lo que a futuro podrá reflejarse en la disminución de precios de gasolinas, proceso que tomará tiempo, porque “la tendencia internacional esta al alza”.

La Gran Época le recomienda el siguiente artículo: “No puedo describir el dolor que sufrí”: la historia de Yu Zhenjie

Source Article from http://www.lagranepoca.com/ultimas-noticias/104790-ultimas-noticias-mexico-hoy-trump-ruiz-massieu-ryan.html

BOSTON/CHICAGO, Jan 14 (Reuters) – Hundreds of students in Boston and Chicago walked out of classes on Friday in protests demanding a switch to remote learning as a surge in COVID-19 cases fueled by the Omicron variant disrupted efforts at returning to in-person education around the United States.

In Chicago, the nation’s third-largest school district, the walkout came two days after in-classroom instruction resumed for 340,000 students who were idled during a five-day work stoppage by unionized teachers pressing for tougher COVID-19 safeguards.

Protesting students said they were dissatisfied with the additional health protocols the teachers union agreed to earlier this week, ending its standoff with the Chicago Public Schools (CPS) district and Mayor Lori Lightfoot.

“I think CPS is listening, but I’m not sure they’ll make a change,” said Jaden Horten, a junior at Jones College Prep High School, during a rally at district headquarters that drew around a thousand students.

The demonstration followed student walkouts at various schools around the city.

About 600 young people from 11 Boston schools participated in student walkouts there, according to the school district, which serves nearly 52,000 pupils. Many protesting students returned to classrooms later, while others went home after taking part in peaceful demonstrations.

An online petition started by a Boston high school senior branding schools a “COVID-19 breeding ground” and calling for a remote learning option had collected more than 8,000 signatures as of Friday morning.

The Boston Student Advisory Council, which organized the walkout, posted a series of demands on Twitter, including two weeks of online instruction and more stringent COVID-19 testing for teachers and students.

The latest wave of infections has renewed the debate over whether to keep schools open, as officials seek to balance fears about the highly contagious Omicron variant with concerns that children could fall further behind academically after two years of stop-and-start instruction. The result has been a patchwork of COVID-19 policies around the country that has left parents feeling exhausted and bewildered.

Ash O’Brien, a 10th-grade student at Boston Latin School who left the building with about a dozen others on Friday, said he didn’t feel safe staying in school.

“I live with two grandparents who are immune-compromised,” he said. “So I don’t want to go to school, risk getting sick and come home to them.”

In a statement, Boston Public Schools said it supports students advocating for their beliefs and vowed to listen to their concerns.

Earlier this week, students at several New York City schools staged a walkout to protest what they said were inadequate safety measures. Mayor Eric Adams said on Thursday his administration was considering a temporary remote learning option for a significant number of students who were staying home.

Nearly 5,000 public schools across the country have closed for at least one day this week due to the pandemic, according to Burbio, a website that tracks school disruptions.

The Omicron surge appears to be slowing in areas of the country that were hit first. In the last week, the average daily tally of new cases has risen only 5% in Northeastern and Southern states compared with the prior seven-day period, according to a Reuters analysis. In Western states, by contrast, the average number of infections documented every day has climbed 89% in the past week compared with the previous week.

Overall, the United States is still tallying nearly 800,000 new infections a day amid record numbers of hospitalized patients with COVID-19.

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

Source Article from https://www.reuters.com/world/us/omicron-fuels-surge-us-students-stage-walkouts-protest-in-person-classes-2022-01-14/

Sirva como muestra de la voracidad ofensiva de Marc Gasol que, hasta esta temporada, sólo había alcanzado los 30 puntos en una ocasión desde que aterrizara en la NBA en 2008. En 14 encuentros del presente curso, el pívot español ya ha llegado tres veces a la treintena. La última, frente a los Clippers. Jamás en su carrera en la Liga había enlazado dos partidos consecutivos de 30 o más puntos.

Marc está ejerciendo de líder del líder. Los Grizzlies se mantienen en todo lo alto de la NBA y el pívot es el principal responsable. “No tenía ninguna duda de que Marc sería agresivo. Visto nuestro balance de 12-2, le vamos a decir que meta 30 puntos todas las noches”, bromeaba el base Mike Conley, uno de sus mejores cómplices en el vestuario.

Frente a los Clippers, aprovechando la distancia que le concedía su marcador DeAndre Jordan, comenzó anotando de cinco y seis metros. “Cuando haces esos tiros, fuerzas a la defensa a salir. Creas tiros para otros compañeros y eso me hace feliz”, analizaba Marc. Después, comenzó a martillear a los angelinos por dentro. Le sobran registros.

“No sé si Marc ha hecho una buena dieta, pero se le ve increíble y está jugando sensacional”, le alabó Doc Rivers, entrenador de los Clippers, su última víctima, que dejó un recado para sus hombres: “Yo sé que Marc tiene una velocidad asombrosa, pero no debería ser capaz de llegar desde la línea del triple hasta el aro sin que nadie le tocara”.

El técnico también dio crédito a Memphis que, lejos de ser una sorpresa, se confirma como el equipo más conjuntado de la NBA. Ahora que ha recuperado a todos sus efectivos tras sufrir un virus, también es uno de los más completos. “Los Grizzlies parecen estar por encima. No están ahí por nada”, dijo Rivers.

Marc, en su último año de contrato, está dispuesto a reventar el mercado el próximo verano. Ser uno de los mejores pívots de la NBA merece una recompensa. En este comienzo de temporada, sus estadísticas no desmerecen las de ningún otro interior de la competición, aunque nadie llega a las de Anthony Davis. En los enfrentamientos particulares, el español no ha salido mal parado ni con él, ni con Dwight Howard, ni con DeMarcus Cousins, otros colosos del Oeste y de la Liga.

El último en padecer los zarpazos de Marc fue DeAndre Jordan, que se quedó ayer en dos míseros puntos. El jefe de los Grizzlies es ahora terrorífico en ataque, pero nunca dejó de serlo en defensa. Por eso es uno de los mejores de la NBA.

La agresividad, en datos: más tiros, más puntos, más faltas recibidas…
El cambio en el juego de Marc es evidente. Se muestra más agresivo que nunca en su carrera en la NBA. Además, está haciendo caso a las muchas voces que decían que debía ser más egoísta y asumir más responsabilidad en ataque, no sólo en la creación gracias a su gran lectura del juego. El pívot español ha dejado de lado algo de generosidad —asiste menos que en las dos últimas temporadas (3,1)— para volcarse más en el ataque: tira (14,3 lanzamientos) y anota (19,9 puntos, 5,3 más que en su mejor temporada y es el vigésimo en la clasificación de anotadores de la NBA) más que nunca en su carrera, fuerza muchas más faltas y va al tiro libre con más frecuencia. Es el quinto jugador de la Liga que más veces ha ido a la línea (94).

Source Article from http://www.marca.com/2014/11/26/baloncesto/nba/noticias/1416984274.html

Robert Mueller’s report makes the stirring claim that “a fundamental principle of our government” is that no person, not even the president, “is above the law.”

But the special counsel’s ultimate legacy may well be the exact opposite — because of his controversial decision not to say whether Trump committed criminal obstruction of justice.

“We concluded that we would not reach a determination, one way or the other, about whether the president committed a crime,” Mueller said in his statement Wednesday, reiterating his report’s explanation.

It was the punt heard around the world. It may have been the crucial turning point in the saga of the special counsel probe, and perhaps the decision most likely to have ramifications for future presidents. It effectively “removes the president from the scope of generally applicable criminal laws,” Cornell law professor Jens David Ohlin recently told my colleague Sean Illing.

Essentially, Mueller has laid out a model that federal prosecutors can investigate the sitting president for crimes, but that they should not make any conclusion about whether he committed a crime. In a sense, this does seem to place the president above the law.

To be clear — this was Mueller’s own choice. Yes, he did conclude that existing department policy prevented him from indicting a sitting president. But before the special counsel wrapped up his work, it was widely believed that he might still issue a judgment on whether Trump committed a crime.

He did not do so, and this “took some constitutional scholars and Justice Department veterans by surprise,” the Washington Post’s Rosalind Helderman wrote Wednesday. Helderman quotes J. Michael Luttig, a former appellate judge and former Justice Department official, saying: “The fact that a president cannot be prosecuted does not foreclose a finding by a special counsel of whether a president committed a crime.”

Oddly, Mueller also went out of his way, both in his report and his statement, to opine that he did not have “confidence” that Trump didn’t break the law. And his legal analyses of certain incidents involving Trump sure seem to suggest he violated the law. But he refused to take the final step and outright come to a conclusion — something Attorney General William Barr has repeatedly said he expected the special counsel to do.

Mueller was also careful never to say that he couldn’t have issued a criminal finding about Trump. In the report, he writes several times that his office “determined” not to do this, and in his Wednesday statement he used the word “concluded.” Additionally, Barr proceeded to ignore this considered decision not to decide, quickly issuing his own conclusion that, in his view, Trump didn’t violate the law.

Still, Mueller’s decision-making around the highest-profile criminal investigation into a president in decades is unmistakably important, and could be viewed as a model for similar future investigations to follow. So we deserve more transparency about how it came about.

Mueller’s reasoning for choosing not to say whether President Trump broke the law

For a report that’s 448 pages long, Mueller’s decision to end his investigation of Trump with a punt is somewhat under-explained.

The special counsel lays it out quickly in the introduction of his report’s second volume. First, he writes, he “accepted” the Justice Department Office of Legal Counsel’s 2000 opinion that the department can’t indict a sitting president because it would undermine his capacity to carry out the work of the executive branch. Second, the report continues, the office determined that investigating the president “is permissible” anyway, to preserve evidence, and because the president wouldn’t have immunity from indictment after he leaves office. So far, that’s all as expected.

But then comes the punt. Though the office “considered” whether to evaluate Trump’s conduct under Justice Department standards about prosecution decisions, Mueller writes, it “determined not to apply an approach that could potentially result in a judgment that the President committed crimes.”

And his main reason is a curious one — that it would be unfair to the president, because the fact that he can’t be charged means he can’t clear his name with an acquittal at trial.

Fairness concerns counseled against potentially reaching that judgment when no charges can be brought. The ordinary means for an individual to respond to an accusation is through a speedy and public trial, with all the procedural protections that surround a criminal case.

An individual who believes he was wrongly accused can use that process to seek to clear his name. In contrast, a prosecutor’s judgment that crimes were committed, but that no charges will be brought, offers no such adversarial opportunity for public name-clearing before an impartial adjudicator.

Mueller reiterated this point in his statement Wednesday. “Beyond department policy, we were guided by principles of fairness,” he said. “It would be unfair to potentially accuse somebody of a crime when there can be no court resolution of an actual charge.” In the report, he refers to this as the “absence of a neutral adjudicatory forum” to review the report’s findings.

Mueller expresses another concern in the report as well — namely, that finding the president committed a crime in an internal report “could carry consequences that extend beyond the realm of criminal justice.” Specifically, it could “imperil the President’s ability to govern.”

So, Mueller said in his statement: “We concluded that we would not reach a determination — one way or the other — about whether the president committed a crime. That is the office’s final position.”

Mueller’s move sets a worrying precedent

Even though Mueller made clear this was his own decision, it will inevitably set a precedent for future investigations into presidents — a problematic one.

If Mueller’s approach is taken as a model, the Justice Department can investigate to their heart’s content, but at the end of the day, they not only won’t indict a sitting president, but they won’t even say whether he broke the law.

It’s the very definition of special treatment, and would essentially remove one potential check on presidential wrongdoing from within the executive branch. It would mean the department charged with investigating and charging violations of federal law won’t assess whether one particular person, the president, violated federal law.

Mueller’s concern about “fairness” to the president, who would lack a forum to clear his name after being accused, is particularly odd.

“That is completely absurd,” Ohlin, the law professor, told Illing. “The president doesn’t have a courtroom to vindicate his innocence only because the DOJ has decided that his office makes him immune from indictment in the first place. It’s a piece of circular reasoning that removes the president from the scope of generally applicable criminal laws.”

The special counsel appears to realize the implications of this position, so in an apparent attempt to mitigate it, he does offer an opinion on Trump’s conduct — that it’s, well, not obviously innocent.

“If we had confidence after a thorough investigation of the facts that the President clearly did not commit obstruction of justice, we would so state,” Mueller writes in his report’s final paragraph.

Indeed, many who have read the report closely have remarked that its legal analysis often seems quite damning for Trump. Lawfare’s Quinta Jurecic, for example, parsed the report’s language about several examples of Trump’s potentially obstructive conduct, with an eye toward whether it established all three legal elements of criminal obstruction of justice. For four examples, the report seems to do just that. Hundreds of federal prosecutors have also opined that Trump’s conduct as outlined in the report would merit charges if he wasn’t president.

But in the end, Mueller, the person who was charged with investigating whether the president of the United States violated the law, refused to outright make a judgment on whether he did. And if, in the future, Justice Department investigators are looking into a sitting president’s potentially criminal conduct, they might feel obligated to follow his example and do the same, rather than rocking the boat.

This wasn’t the obvious call — and Barr quickly made a different call

Again, Mueller did not conclude that he was prohibited from making a criminal finding about the president. He says he “considered” doing so. It’s just that he concluded that he wouldn’t.

This was far from a foregone conclusion, it certainly came as a surprise to me and others who have covered Mueller’s investigation for years.

Attorney General William Barr, for instance, testified that he was “frankly surprised” to learn this in March and that he “did not understand exactly why the special counsel was not reaching a decision.”

Indeed, Barr proceeded to do exactly what Mueller wouldn’t — evaluating the evidence and concluding that, in his view, it wasn’t sufficient to establish Trump committed a crime. So, in a sense, Mueller’s considered decision not to decide was immediately thrown out the window by his superior.

“The opinion says you cannot indict a president while he is in office,” Barr told CBS News this week. “But he could’ve reached a decision as to whether it was criminal activity.”

Mueller may have had other reasons for restraint

Perhaps hanging over all this is the fact that, if Mueller had submitted a report to Barr concluding that Trump committed a crime, it would have initiated a crisis.

Mueller would have been the man who threw the Justice Department into turmoil, as the department would inevitably have struggled with how to handle such an explosive conclusion. (Remember that Barr was not legally obligated to make Mueller’s findings public.)

Once the news inevitably got out, Mueller would likely have become the man who lit the impeachment fuse. Congressional Democratic leaders are having enough difficulty holding off their base’s desire to impeach Trump as it is. An unambiguous conclusion from Mueller that Trump violated the law would have led to pressure that may well have been impossible for them to withstand.

It’s possible Mueller believes that’s a decision that should be made by Congress, not a Justice Department prosecutor. The House of Representatives is essentially the “prosecutor” in the impeachment process — they can vote to kick-start a trial in the Senate. He might have envisioned his job as limited to gathering evidence and presenting some analysis.

But when Mueller’s report does reference impeachment, he seems concerned about interfering with that process. A “criminal accusation against a sitting President,” he writes, could “potentially preempt constitutional processes for addressing presidential misconduct.” (A footnote there makes clear he means impeachment). So essentially, Mueller has ceded the role of deciding whether the president committed a crime to Congress.

There may also have been features of the case itself that made Mueller prefer restraint. He didn’t establish an underlying conspiracy between the Trump campaign and the Russian government to interfere with the election. And despite all his troubling obstruction evidence, he lacked an indisputable smoking gun example, like Trump outright telling witnesses to lie to investigators or destroying evidence.

But his decision really deserves more transparency and debate

In the end, Mueller’s decision not to make a criminal finding one way or the other may be the most crucial decision he made during his investigation — and we should really get more transparency about it.

When did the special counsel decide on this approach, exactly? What was the debate over it like? How close was he to going in a different direction? What sort of internal analyses were written on this topic? Was his decision based on the particular circumstances of this case, or would his reasoning apply to all similar investigations? Should the new standard be that the Justice Department never opines on whether the president has violated the law?

It’s understandable that Mueller doesn’t want to testify before Congress about uncharged individuals and uncharged conduct, as per Justice Department practice. But this is a process call that could have major consequences for future investigations of presidents, and accordingly deserves a good deal more review and debate.

Considering how consequential this decision may have been, the few paragraphs about this in Mueller’s report simply aren’t enough — nor are his brief remarks this week. His decision poses the risk that future investigations of presidents will be hamstrung from the start. So he should give a better explanation of why he made this call.

Source Article from https://www.vox.com/policy-and-politics/2019/5/31/18645173/mueller-report-barr-trump-obstruction

Media captionGreek police fire tear gas at migrants

Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan says 18,000 migrants have crossed Turkish borders into Europe after the country “opened the doors” for them to travel.

The number is expected to hit 25,000 to 30,000 in the coming days, he said.

Turkey could no longer deal with the amount of people fleeing Syria’s civil war, he added.

Greece says it has blocked thousands of migrants from entering “illegally” from Turkey.

Greek authorities fired tear gas to attempt to disperse the crowds.

Turkey’s decision followed a deadly attack on Turkish troops by Syrian government forces in northern Syria this week.

At least 33 Turkish soldiers were killed in a bombardment in Idlib, the last Syrian province where Syrian rebel groups hold significant territory.

Syrian government forces, supported by Russia, have been trying to retake Idlib from jihadist groups and Turkish-backed rebel factions.

Turkey is hosting 3.7 million Syrian refugees, as well as migrants from other countries such as Afghanistan – but had previously stopped them from leaving for Europe under an aid-linked deal with the EU.

But Mr Erdogan accused the EU of breaking promises.

Image copyright
AFP

Image caption

Turkey says up to 30,000 could cross into the EU in the coming days

“We said months ago that if it goes on like this, we will have to open the doors. They did not believe us, but we opened the doors yesterday,” President Erdogan said in Istanbul on Saturday.

He said that some 18,000 refugees had “pressed on the gates and crossed” into Europe by Saturday morning. He did not provide evidence of these numbers.

“We will not close these doors in the coming period and this will continue. Why? The European Union needs to keep its promises. We don’t have to take care of this many refugees, to feed them,” he said.

Brussels had not given full financial aid agreed in the 2018 Turkey-EU refugee deal, he said.

Image copyright
AFP

Image caption

Greece says it stopped 4,000 attempts to enter its border

Greece said it had averted more than 4,000 attempts to cross into the country. There were further clashes between migrants and Greek police on Saturday.

“The government will do whatever it takes to protect its borders,” government spokesman Stelios Petsas told reporters.

The Turkish president also said that he had asked Russian President Vladimir Putin – a close ally of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad – to stand aside and let Turkey “do what is necessary” with the Syrian government by itself.

Russia and Turkey are backing opposing sides in the civil war. Turkey is opposed to the government of Bashar al-Assad and supports some rebel groups.

Media captionMigrants head for Turkey’s EU borders

Source Article from https://www.bbc.com/news/world-europe-51687160

Following Saturday’s meeting between President Trump and Chinese President Xi Jinping at the G20 summit in Japan, it is clear that Trump’s strategic use of tariffs to end China’s rampant illegal trade cheating and intellectual property theft is putting pressure on the Chinese to negotiate a more balanced trade agreement.

It’s about time we had a president willing to stand firm and bargain hard with China to serve our national interest. 

Trump’s tough stand and refusal to turn a blind eye to China’s misconduct has the potential to open the door to trade that is genuinely free and fair between the world’s two largest economies. This could lead to a sweeping trade agreement that would be one of the most important economic compacts in world history and benefit both nations for decades to come.

TRUMP, XI REACH PLAN TO RESUME TRADE TALKS, TARIFFS ON HOLD FOR NOW

In an important vindication of Trump’s refusal to surrender to Chinese pressure, he and Xi agreed to resume stalled U.S.-China trade negotiations. Xi appears to have finally realized that unlike past American presidents, Trump is a master negotiator who will not surrender to Chinese pressure tactics. As Trump has pointed out before, a bad deal is worse than no deal.

While the talks proceed and as a show of good will, Trump said he would not impose tariffs on an additional $300 billion in Chinese imports, as he had planned to do.

However, the U.S. president wisely said he will maintain tariffs he imposed earlier on $250 billion in Chinese products to keep the pressure on China to reach a fair trade deal with the U.S.  China imposed tariffs on $60 billion in U.S. products in response to Trump’s earlier tariffs.

“We discussed a lot of things, and we’re right back on track,” Trump said after he and Xi concluded their talks. “We had a very, very good meeting with China.” Trump said the talks went “even better than expected.”

Trump also said that Xi agreed that China will buy a “tremendous amount” of U.S. agricultural products. That’s great news for America’s farmers.

In return for China’s agreement to buy more from our farmers, Trump agreed to allow

American companies to sell products to Chinese telecom giant Huawei Technologies. That’s a plus for the U.S. because it brings money from China into our country and supports jobs for American workers.

You would think even Trump critics would acknowledge that the president has made great progress in getting China to the negotiating table and open to reaching a final agreement. But sadly, the days when Democrats would support a Republican president negotiating with a global competitor seem to be a distant memory.

Trump’s tough stand and refusal to turn a blind eye to China’s misconduct has the potential to open the door to trade that is genuinely free and fair between the world’s two largest economies.

Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., made the point Saturday following the president’s obviously successful trip to Japan. Schumer criticized Trump for supposedly giving up “one of few potent levers we have to make China play fair on trade” by agreeing that American companies can sell products to Huawei.

Of course, China isn’t going to enter into an agreement where it gets nothing in return. In any negotiation, you have to give something to get something.

So what exactly did Trump give?  As stated by the president: “U.S. companies can sell their equipment to Huawei” but only “equipment where there’s no great national security problem with it.” 

Trump neither conceded nor suggested that he was backing off plans to prohibit the import of Huawei equipment for U.S. 5G telecommunications networks. That issue is the main concern of America’s intelligence community.  

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There is nothing wrong with American companies generating more revenue to support American jobs by selling non-secure products to a large Chinese company. If that’s the best criticism Schumer and his allies have got, you have to feel pretty good about the way the negotiations are going for the Trump administration – and for America.

There will certainly be hard bargaining ahead to make long-overdue repairs to our trading relationship with China. We won’t know for certain if a deal will be reached until the talks conclude. But both parties are at the table and, importantly, all Americans can have confidence that President Trump will drive a hard bargain that prevents China from continuing to take advantage of our country with unfair and illegal practices.

CLICK HERE TO READ MORE BY ANDY PUZDER

Source Article from https://www.foxnews.com/opinion/andy-puzder-trumps-china-trade-strategy-could-lead-to-historic-agreement-benefiting-both-nations

Actualizada a las 12:45

Ante unos 1.600 invitados, Lenín Moreno Garcés juró esta mañana el cargo como nuevo presidente de Ecuador. Su saludo previo de bienvenida a los mandatarios y delegaciones invitadas a la ceremonia lo dio la secretaria de la Asamblea.

“Todos somos hechos del mismo Ecuador, compartimos el aire… de a poco nos convertimos el uno en el otro… todos somos hechos del mismo barro”, dijo en la introducción de su discurso, para luego reiterar el saludo a los mandatarios y delegaciones internacionales presentes, así como los invitados nacionales e internacionales, y de manera especial a su esposa, hijas, hijos políticos, nietos, a quienes agradeció el apoyo, a toda su familia y al vicepresidente Jorge Glas.

En su discurso, que duró una hora con 16 minutos, habló de sus compromisos con el Estado, con los ecuatorianos, pero también de los compromisos de los ciudadanos, de los empresarios, de los estudiantes, de los productores para con el país.

Alrededor de las 09:50, Lenín Moreno ingresó a la Asamblea para el cambio de mando.

Señaló que en su gobierno, que inicia hoy, todos formarán parte de un profundo diálogo nacional. “Ha concluido una etapa que, como todas, no está libre de errores… desde hoy el futuro; soy el presidente de todos, me debo a todos”.

Rafael Correa llegó en un vehículo militar para entregar el cargo presidencial.

Además, se refirió a sus propuestas expresadas durante la campaña presidencial y detalló su gestión a realizar, en la que dijo están incluidas la niñez, los adolescentes, las personas de la tercera edad, las personas con discapacidad. A esta último grupo le reiteró su propuesta de darles un bono de hasta 150 dólares mensuales.

Señaló que su trabajo con los jóvenes estará dividido por etapas. La segunda de ellas denominada ‘impulso al joven’ será para enseñarles a los jóvenes a controlar la naturaleza en beneficio del ser humano y de la propia naturaleza, que aprenda a contextualizar, que responda con elocuencia, que desarrolle metodologías propuestas y que se incline por la investigación, no negarle que estudie la carrera de su sueños pero a la vez atendiendo la calidad y la excelencia que requieren la educación universitaria para formar profesionales útiles a la sociedad.

Rafael Correa saludó a sus simpatizantes que lo ovacionaron al llegar al salón Nela Martínez de la Asamblea Nacional.

Además, señaló que no puede haber diálogo sin libertad de expresión. Es el alma del pueblo, dijo. “La relación con los medios será fresca, fluida, dialogante”, precisó. Indicó que la libertad de prensa debe tener calidad, altura. “Espero que sean portadores del anhelo ciudadano… no haré enlace semanal, pero como ordena la Constitución mantendré informada a la ciudadanía”, agregó.

También se refirió a los ciudadanos, de quienes dijo también tienen su compromiso con el país. Enfatizó que “es hora de dejar de actuar como víctimas, es hora de cambiar… Estamos diseñados para cambiar y qué mejor que cambiar un espíritu para formar un todo”.

Destacó la necesidad del compromiso del productor para entregar lo mejor de su producto al consumidor, con la misma calidad pero a menor precio; el compromiso del empresario a tratar mejor al empleado. Agregó que es necesario que los empresarios comprendan que es mejor pensar en los otros que en sí mismo.

“Nos estamos haciendo el harakiri nosotros mismos… hay que hablar bien del país y nosotros como gobierno nos vamos a encargar de ello… queremos ciudadanos que sean responsables, puntuales al momento de cumplir con sus obligaciones tributarias”, dijo.

Toma de mando

El presidente de la Asamblea Nacional, José Serrano, tomó el juramento de Lenín Moreno a las 11:01, posesionándolo como el presidente de los ecuatorianos. La banda presidencial le fue colocada por el presidente saliente, Rafael Correa.

Asimismo, el titular de la Asamblea tomó el juramento como vicepresidente a Jorge Glas.

Quince minutos después, a las 11:16 Correa salió de la sala plenaria Nela Martínez sin discurso alguno, previo a despedirse de las diferentes delegaciones que se encontraban en el palacio legislativo. Antes de su salida hubo cantos en su honor, momentos en que a Correa se lo vio con lágrimas.

Los presidentes entrante Moreno (i) y saliente Correa (d) saludan en la mes principal de la Asamblea donde se cumple el traspaso de mando.

Al inicio de la ceremonia, Serrano dio la bienvenida a la sede legislativa a los mandatarios entrante y saliente e invitados, alabó la gestión de su coideario Correa e hizo un recuento del país antes de los 10 años de la administración presidencial que hoy culmina.

Durante su intervención, que duró aproximadamente unos 30 minutos, indicó que el balance de estos 10 años no puede determinarse con números y estadísticas, ni con índices ni cifras. “Cómo cuantificar un presente de dignidad para las grandes mayorías del país”, dijo.

Señaló que se va a “ciudadanizar el ejercicio legislativo”, y continuarán con el trabajo de la Asamblea para que esas normas que responden a la consulta popular sea a favor de la población. Además, se profundizará el trabajo de fiscalización de la Asamblea invitando a la ciudadanía para que sea parte del proceso.

En el salón principal de la Asamblea, también se mostraron letreros de apoyo a los venezolanos y en rechazo a Nicolás Maduro.

Moreno, de 64 años, es licenciado en administración de empresas y fue vicepresidente del saliente Rafael Correa entre 2007 y 2013, cuando se alejó del gobierno para asumir como enviado especial de las Naciones Unidas para las personas con discapacidad.

Su vicepresidente Jorge Glas, también recibió aplausos al llegar para asumir el segundo mando en el país.

Previamente, en un vehículo militar, el presidente que ejerció el cargo durante diez años, Rafael Correa Delgado, recibió el saludo de simpatizantes a lo largo de su recorrido, momentos antes Moreno había hecho su arribo a la sala plenaria.

Asambleístas, autoridades locales, delegaciones internacionales y jefes de Estado de al menos once naciones como Chile, Argentina, Bolivia, Guatemala, Paraguay, Colombia, entre otros mandatarios, asistieron al interior de la sede de la Asamblea Nacional a la ceremonia en que el presidente electo en las pasadas elecciones del 2 de abril, Lenín Moreno, asumió la primera magistratura. (I)

Source Article from http://www.eluniverso.com/noticias/2017/05/24/nota/6198136/lenin-moreno-asume-presidencia-ecuador

House Democrats on Wednesday unveiled their latest “Medicare-for-all” bill — a sweeping overhaul of the nation’s health care system that would largely outlaw private insurance as part of what critics call a one-size-fits-all government takeover.

The bill was introduced by Reps. Pramila Jayapal, D-Wash., and Debbie Dingell, D-Mich., and is co-sponsored by more than 100 House Democrats including Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, D-N.Y., showing the extent to which the policy has drifted from the fringe of the party to the mainstream.

BERNIE SANDERS SAYS ‘NO’ TO AMERICANS WHO WANT TO KEEP PRIVATE INSURANCE UNDER ‘MEDICARE-FOR-ALL’

It would move America to a virtual single-payer system, like systems used in the U.K. and Canada, and promises to “prevent healthcare corporations from overcharging for the costs of their services and profiting off illness and injury.”

“It’s time to put people’s health over profit. Our bill will cover everyone. Not just those who are fortunate enough to have employer-sponsored insurance,” Jayapal said in a statement. “Not just children. Not just seniors. Not just those who are healthy. Everyone. Because healthcare is a human right. We will need every single person in the country to help us, to stand with us, to organize and to fight for this.”

“Everybody in, nobody out,” Jayapal said at a press conference, according to The Guardian, where she hailed the bill as a “complete transformation of our healthcare system.”

The legislation, though, revives a controversy over what such a health care overhaul would mean for private insurance. Under the new proposal, private insurance plans could only be used to supplement coverage that is offered by the government, “for any additional benefits not covered by this Act.”

But the text of the proposal makes clear that private policies would largely be eliminated. One clause in the bill makes it “unlawful” for a private health insurer “to sell health insurance coverage that duplicates the benefits provided under this Act.” The text also prohibits employers from doing the same.

America’s Health Insurance Plans, an advocacy group for the private health insurance industry, said the vast majority of Americans are happy with their coverage as it is.

“Americans want to improve what’s working for them and fix what’s broken. This bill will hurt patients, consumers, and taxpayers: Americans will pay more, to wait longer, for worse care,” spokeswoman Kristine Grow told Fox News in an email. “Let’s focus on real solutions that deliver real results, not a one-size-fits-all government system.”

Republicans immediately painted the plan as “disastrous,” pointing to studies that suggest the price tag could be as high as $32 trillion.

Rep. Pramila Jayapal (D-WA) unveiled her “Medicare-for-all” plan this week. REUTERS/Aaron P. Bernstein

“Medicare for all will eliminate private insurance, make trips to the DMV look like a Caribbean vacation and cost taxpayers trillions. Good luck to the vulnerable House Democrats who will be forced to defend this $32 trillion boondoggle,” National Republican Congressional Committee spokesman Michael McAdams said in a statement.

The legislation was quiet on the question of price. According to Politico, Jayapal said she plans to release a separate list of suggested funding mechanisms — which include additional taxes or mandated employer contributions.

According to a fact sheet from Dingell’s office, the transition to Medicare-for-all would take two years. The coverage would include all primary care, dental, vision, maternity and newborn care, prescription drugs, mental health services and others. It would also cover “women’s reproductive health services.” The plan would appear to leave little that could be covered by private insurers.

The move marks a radical shift from former President Barack Obama’s original pitch for ObamaCare — where he falsely promised: “If you like your plan, you can keep your plan.” That statement was eventually labeled “lie of the year” by Politifact.

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., has not co-sponsored the bill, but has indicated she would allow hearings on the bill in an apparent nod to the party’s left flank. The legislation would almost certainly be dead on arrival in the Republican-controlled Senate.

But the legislation appears to mark part of a broader shift by Democrats, with a number of 2020 presidential hopefuls coming out in favor of Medicare-for-all plans, and some putting their support behind abolishing private health plans.

Sen. Kamala Harris, D-Calif., was asked by CNN host Jake Tapper in January if people could keep their current health care plan under her Medicare-for-all plan. She indicated that they couldn’t, suggesting she wants to move toward a single-payer system rather than a mere expansion of Medicare.

KAMALA HARRIS UNDER FIRE AFTER CALLING FOR ABOLITION OF PRIVATE HEALTH CARE PLANS: ‘THAT NOT AMERICAN’

“Well, listen, the idea is that everyone gets access to medical care. And you don’t have to go through the process of going through an insurance company, having them give you approval, going through the paperwork, all of the delay that may require,” Harris told Tapper.

“Who among us has not had that situation?” she continued. “Where you got to wait for approval, and the doctor says, ‘Well I don’t know if your insurance company is going to cover this.’ Let’s eliminate all of that. Let’s move on.”

On Monday, fellow 2020 hopeful Sen. Bernie Sanders, I-Vt., was asked on CNN if, under his plan, people could keep their private plans.

“No,” Sanders responded mid-question as he shook his head. “What will change in their plans is the color of their card. So, instead of having a Blue Cross/Blue Shield card, instead of having a United Health Insurance card, they’re gonna have a Medicare card.”

Fox News’ Joseph Wulfsohn contributed to this report.

Source Article from https://www.foxnews.com/politics/new-medicare-for-all-bill-would-largely-outlaw-private-insurance

Image caption

Bastián Vásquez viajó en 2013 a España y después se trasladó a la frontera entre Siria e Irak.

El diario El País de España confirmó este sábado la muerte de Bastián Alexis Vásquez, el joven noruego de padres chilenos que se hizo famoso por protagonizar un video del grupo radical autodenominado Estado Islámico en 2014.

El periódico señala que fuentes de las Fuerzas y Cuerpos de Seguridad de España lo identificaron como una de las 29 personas “con relación al país” (nacionales o residentes) que murieron combatiendo en las filas del grupo islamista.

De hecho, desde 2014 ya se rumoreaba que Vásquez, de 26 años, había muerto, pero hasta ahora el dato no se había confirmado. Sin embargo, se desconoce la fecha y la causa de su muerte.

La aparición de Vásquez (o Abu Safiyyah, de Chile, como se hacía llamar) en un video donde se declaraba que los terrenos de Irak y Siria tomados por EI eran considerados un “califato” y en el que el yihadista se atribuía la participación en varios asaltos, evidenció la internacionalización del grupo islamista y el alcance de su maquinaria de comunicaciones.

“El video, con sus llamativas imágenes y sus sorprendentes valores de producción, está diseñado para electrizar a sus seguidores”, dijo en su momento el corresponsal de la BBC en Irak, Paul Adams.

Y el hecho de que se describa a Abu Safiyya como chileno, simplemente agrega un elemento que los autores esperan que ahora sea el atractivo global de la organización”, agregó.

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Bastian Vásquez (o Abu Safiyya, como se hacía llamar) mostrando la destrucción en la frontera entre Irak y Siria.

Pero desde aquella “estelar” presentación, se le perdió el rastro. Noruega emitió una orden de captura contra Vásquez por su “participación en grupos terroristas” y nunca más se supo de él.

Hasta este sábado, que de acuerdo al diario El País fue identificado por las autoridades españoles como uno de los insurgentes muertos en medio de los combates.

Del hip-hop a Siria

Al conocer el video, BBC Mundo viajó hasta la población de Skien, ubicada unos 245 kilómetros al sur de Oslo, donde el joven noruego vivía con sus padres.

“Supe que como adolescente había formado parte de un grupo comunitario de músicos de hip hop. Y que hace cinco años ocurrió el cambio drástico en su vida cuando conoció a varios musulmanes radicales, uno de ellos era Mohyeldeen Mohammad, un joven noruego iraquí que pronto se volvió uno de los radicales de más alto perfil en este país”, le dijo a BBC Mundo Lars Akerhaug, periodista noruega que entrevistó a Vásquez varias veces.

En su pueblo lo recordaban así, como un joven apacible y callado en su juventud, que de repente tuvo una especie de conversión.

Sus padres, chilenos de nacimiento, se habían instalado en Skien en 1988 y Bastián fue su tercer hijo y el único que nació en Noruega. Durante años tuvieron una vida tranquila y normal.

“Se convirtió en musulmán cuando comenzó a conocer las injusticias que se cometían en contra de los civiles en Irak y Afganistán”, relató su abogado John Christian Elden al diario El Mercurio de Chile.

Pero fue precisamente cuando comenzó a radicalizar sus ideas, de la mano de Mohyeldeen Mohammad, que todo cambió.

De ser una persona silenciosa y que no se hacía notar, pasó a grabar un video en el cuarto en el que amenazaba al rey Haroldo V y al Parlamento y que publicó en las redes sociales.

Por ese motivo fue arrestado, pero fue liberado poco después. Sin embargo, cuando fue citado a juicio en 2013 para comparecer por sus amenazas, no apareció.

Huida a Siria

Image caption

Esta es la casa de la infancia de Bastian Vásquez en Skien, Noruega.

Nadie de su familia quiso hablar con BBC Mundo. Solo se conocen las declaraciones de uno de sus hermanos, que brevemente describió la situación de la familia: “Estamos conmocionados por lo que hemos visto y no queremos dar más declaraciones”.

En el momento de partir, Vásquez había dado un par de pistas sobre lo que haría: viajar a Siria.

Pero haría algunas escalas.

De acuerdo a las autoridades españolas, el joven islamista noruego viajó hasta Barcelona, donde frecuentó los círculos salafistas –considerados los más radicales dentro del islamismo- y contactó a varias personas con el ánimo de reclutarlas para que lucharan con Estado Islámico.

BBC Mundo pudo constatar cómo en su página de Facebook se registró en lugares turísticos de la ciudad durante varios días y meses: publicó su visita al estadio Camp Nou del FC Barcelona, equipo del que era fanático.

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El centro de la ciudad de Skien, en Noruega. Los Vásquez vivían en Gulset, un suburbio en el noroeste de la ciudad.

Estando allí adquirió su tarjeta de residente español, que ha sido el documento que permitió la identificación por parte de los cuerpos de seguridad españoles y que fue publicado por El País.

Sin embargo, después de su paso por Barcelona se le perdió todo el rastro.

El video de las fronteras

El Bastián Vásquez que aparece en el video es otro: una barba profusa cubría su rostro y, mientras se paseaba por una zona de la frontera entre Irak y Siria, explicaba su misión:

“No reconocemos esta frontera, nunca la reconoceremos. Y no será la última frontera que rompamos”, se escucha decir a Vásquez.

“En el mundo musulmán no hay fronteras y esperemos que solo tenga un imán –jefe religioso- que debe ser Abu Bakr al Bagdadi”, concluyó.

Image copyright
AP

Image caption

John, el yihadista, fue otro de los hombres que salieron hablando en inglés en los videos de Estado Islámico.

La aparición de Vásquez ocurrió también por los mismos días en que se conoció el video de John, el yihadista (su verdadero nombre es Mohammed Emwazi), donde aparecía otro joven -éste con un pronunciado acento británico- decapitando a un periodista en frente de la cámara.

Ambos personajes se convirtieron en los rostros internacionales de Estado Islámico y la guerra en Irak y Siria que inició en junio de 2014.

Pero ambos acabaron con su vida en las filas de la organización: la muerte de Emwazi fue confirmada por el propio Estado Islámico y ahora, la de Bastián Vásquez, el yihadista llegado de Noruega.

Source Article from http://www.bbc.com/mundo/noticias/2016/01/160131_bastian_vasquez_chileno_yihadista_estado_islamico_amv

AURORA, Colo. (KDVR) – Six teenagers were taken to the hospital after a drive-by shooting at Nome Park on Monday afternoon, the Aurora Police Department said.

The victims are between the ages of 14 and 18. Aurora Central High School, which is located at 11700 E. 11th Ave., has the perimeter of the school secured. All the victims are students at the high school.

One child is in emergency surgery, APD Chief Vanessa Wilson said. First responders applied a tourniquet to the child after being shot.

An 18-year-old victim with minor injuries got to the hospital on their own after the initial incident. Three of the victims are currently being treated at Children’s Hospital and two are at UCHealth.

Sources inside the school told FOX31’s Joshua Short that kids were locked in classrooms and quiet, which is the protocol for situations like these.

Wilson said there are multiple suspects at-large and no longer at the scene. The perimeter was expanded as police investigated the area.

One witness described hearing 30 to 50 gunshots, then kids scattering.

Aurora Public Schools sent out an email and automated message to communicate dismissal for students to all Central High School parents.

This is the latest of several violent crimes at Nome Park this year.

FOX31’s Data Desk discovered three aggravated assaults that occurred at the park prior to this incident this year, including one that was gun-related. Another three gun-related aggravated assaults occurred across the street.

Nome Park was the location of a gang-related shooting in 2019 in which teen Dangelo Domena was charged with attempted first-degree murder.

Aurora Mayor Mike Coffman made this statement on youth violence following the shooting:

A shooting today in a park by Aurora Central High School has left six young people hospitalized. My prayers are with the injured and their families. As the facts surrounding this incident become known, I look forward to hearing from our Chief of Police and from our District Attorney about what actions will be taken to apprehend and prosecute, to the fullest extent of the law, those responsible for this incident. The most important function of government is the protection of its people and I strongly believe that public safety must always be the top priority for this city.

 Aurora City Manager Jim Twombly leads day-to-day operations at the city said:

Our thoughts are with the victims and their families. Today’s incident is deeply troubling. Violence involving teenagers and young adults is distressing and is sadly a public health problem in communities across the nation. The safety of young people in our community is a priority and that is why we have joined with other metro communities in working collaboratively to address youth violence as a public health crisis.

Earlier this year, the city of Aurora launched the Youth Violence Prevention Program to develop a model inclusive of public health, prevention and intervention efforts that are based on national models and best practices to prevent and address youth violence in the short-term and the long-term. We also entered the Aurora/Denver Youth Empowerment Compact in Nov. 2020 to develop strategies and identify new and existing resources to combat youth violence with a public health approach in collaboration with the City and County of Denver.

Addressing youth violence is complex. We believe these efforts combined with robust, ongoing community input will help reduce the impact of youth violence across the region.

Wilson is asking the public to contact Metro Crime Stoppers at 720-913-7867 with any information or video of the incident.

Source Article from https://kdvr.com/news/local/aurora-shooting-nome-park/

Pacific Gas & Electric warned tens of thousands of customers in California that their power may be shut off Monday to help prevent wildfires due to severe wind and drought conditions in the area.

The preemptive shutdowns, at the inconvenience of customers, come as the company is still reeling from fallout related to deadly blazes in 2018 and 2020 authorities say were sparked by trees hitting the power grid. They also come as climate change has exacerbated California’s wildfires, stoking conditions experts say have led to the larger and deadlier blazes seen in recent years.

The company sent shutoff warnings to nearly 25,000 customers spanning 22 counties — including Alameda, Fresno and Napa — in northern and central California on Sunday.

On Monday, PG&E updated on its website that shutoffs were required and its map of outages indicated power had been temporarily turned off in a slew of communities in the state’s Northern Sierra Foothills region, North Coast region and beyond.

“Since Friday, PG&E meteorologists have been tracking the weather system, which is expected to start Sunday night and bring wind gusts of up to 50 mph by Monday morning,” the company said in a statement Sunday. “PG&E’s in-house meteorologists, its Wildfire Safety Operations Center and its Emergency Operations Center continue to monitor conditions closely.”

Customers impacted were notified via text, email and automated phone calls beginning Saturday, the company said. More information on the latest status in specific neighborhoods can be found on PG&E’s website, along with tips for customers on how to prepare for the planned outages — such as unplugging appliances and using battery-powered flashlights.

Counties that would likely see the most customers impacted include Tehama (where 5,342 customers were sent warnings), Solano (4,561 customers) and Lake (4,008 customers). PG&E initially said it expects “minimal impact” to be felt by customers in the Bay Area and Central Valley.

The National Weather Service has warned of high winds in California due to a powerful storm in the west bringing a “critical fire weather” warning in central and northern California through Tuesday.

The so-called Public Safety Power Shutoffs (PSPS), which proactively turn off power in an effort to reduce the risk of wildfire from energized power lines, come as California has been battling larger and deadlier blazes in recent years linked to climate change.

The preemptive power shutdowns also come as PG&E has been embroiled in controversy linked to the wildfires. Late last month, the company was charged with involuntary manslaughter and other counts related to the 2020 Zogg Fire, which was sparked by a tree contacting a PG&E electric line.

PG&E CEO Patti Poppe disputed the criminal charges in a statement shortly after they were announced, saying, “We’ve accepted CAL FIRE’s determination, reached earlier this year, that a tree contacted our electric line and started the Zogg Fire. We accept that conclusion. But we did not commit a crime.”

“This was a tragedy, four people died. And my coworkers are working so hard to prevent fires and the catastrophic losses that come with them. They have dedicated their careers to it, criminalizing their judgment is not right,” Poppe added.

The latest legal action taken against the firm comes after the company pleaded guilty last year to 84 counts of involuntary manslaughter and one count of unlawfully starting a fire for its link to the ignition of the devastating 2018 Camp Fire.

In her statement, Poppe noted steps the firm is taking to prevent wildfires, saying it is investing more than $1.4 billion in 2021 alone in vegetation management, removing 300,000 trees and trimming a million more, working toward burying 10,000 miles of power lines and more.

Source Article from https://abcnews.go.com/Business/pges-preemptive-wildfire-prevention-power-shutdowns-impact-thousands/story?id=80517112